DIASPORAN SOULS IN THE NAMESAKE BY JHUMPA LAHIRI
Date
2017-03-03
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Language in India
Abstract
The term ‘diaspora’ is derived from the Greek word meaning to “scatter about.” Diaspora
refers to the movement of the people from one country to another and the diasporans refer to the
people undergoing the movement. The diasporans migrate to different countries across the globe
in search of greener pastures. Wherever they go, they take with them a profound sense of home
land (native land) with them. Either they have gone there for economic settlement or permanent
settlement, they have their roots in their native land. They are highly patriotic towards their
mother land. These diasporans are called as first generation immigrants. They have split souls
and they try to etch a space for themselves. But on the other hand their children, called as second
generation immigrants could not confront with reality and they refuse to accept their parents as
their saviors in their diasporic sickness. Jhumpalahiri, a second generation immigrant acts as a true representative of displaced voices and dislocated identities. This paper focuses on the
diasporan souls in Jhumpalahiri’s The Name Sake
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Keywords
Diaspora, rootlessness, migration, identity crisis, immigrants